Licensing error closes famous Belfast pub 'The Crown'

A historic pub owned by the UK National Trust in Belfast city centre has closed its doors because its licence has lapsed.

The Crown Bar on Great Victoria Street is one of the most famous in Northern Ireland, distinguished by its period gas lighting, church-style stained glass windows, cosy wooden snugs and mosaics of tiles.

It was once a Victorian gin palace and dates back to the early days of the railways and industrialisation in the early 1800s.

The shutters were pulled down after a permit to sell alcohol was not renewed, believed to have expired in November 2012 following an “oversight”.

A Trust spokesman said: “The Crown Bar has been leased to the current tenant since 2006. All statutory obligations, including the renewal of licences, rest with the tenant.

“We are very concerned to learn about this oversight and we encourage the tenant to seek a speedy resolution to this issue to ensure this historic building is reopened to the public as soon as possible.”

The Trust purchased the property in 1978 and restored it to its full Victorian splendour, when it served travellers just off the train at the old station nearby.

The pub includes ten different-shaped and elaborately carved wooden boxes, lettered form A to J. The snugs contain gunmetal plates for striking matches, and an antique bell system, very common in Victorian houses, where servants where employed, which alerted bar staff.

The Crown has been a magnet for tourists and local regulars on one of the busiest streets for nightlife in Belfast.